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Kings Park and Botanic Garden has more memorials, statues and honour avenues than any other park in Australia. Listed below are just a few that can be found along the Fraser Avenue Precinct and which form part of the self-guided memorial guided walk:
Download Memorial_Guided Walk Brochure 259.51 Kb.
More information on all the memorials in Kings Park can be found in the book 'Memorials and Memories', available for sale in Aspects of Kings Park.
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John Forrest
This statue honours the first Premier of Western Australia
and the first President of the Kings Park Board.
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State War Memorial
Precinct
See the ANZAC Bluff Commemmorateive Plaque, Cenotaph and Court of Contemplation below.
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- ANZAC Bluff Commemorative
Plaque
This plaque is dedicated to the 2500 men of the Australian
and New Zealand Army Corps known as ANZAC, who lost
their lives in the Gallipoli campaign of 1915.
The area below the Cenotaph was renamed Anzac Bluff
in 1974 as it resembles the site where the soldiers
first landed at Gallipoli.
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- Cenotaph
An 18 metre granite obelisk commemorates all Western Australians
who gave their lives in the service of their country.
The internal walls of the undercroft list the names
of more than 7000 members of the services killed in
action or who died of wounds or illness in WWI.
Bronze plaques on the outside walls of the undercroft
list the names of nearly 4000 Australians who lost
their lives in WWII. Names of the fallen from subsequent
conflicts are also included here.
- Court of Contemplation
Commemorates the conflicts in which Western Australians
have fallen. The walls feature the names of major
battlefields.
The Flame of Remembrance within the Pool of Reflection
burns continuously. It symbolises the promise of all
Western Australians that
"We will remember
them".
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10th Light Horse Memorial
The 10th Light Horse Regiment is one of the country's
oldest and best known. It was formed in 1900 and was
trained in Western Australia.
The Memorial honours 301 men from this regiment who
fell in WW1.
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South African War Memorial
The first war memorial erected in the Park. It honours
Western Australian soldiers killed in the Boer War
(1899-1902).
The Krupp field gun was captured at Bothaville and
presented to the State by the British Government in
1906.
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Queen Victoria Statue
Presented to the people of Western Australia by Mr A.
Stoneham in 1902, the two guns dated 1843 may have been
used in the Crimean War. Those dated 1813 and 1814 may
have been used by Wellington's army at Waterloo.
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Floral Clock
A bequest from Mr F. Wittenoom, a Western Australian
pastoralist, was used to build a floral clock that was
unveiled in 1962. The call of the Rufous Whistler, a bird
found in Kings Park bushland, indicates the half hours.
Native Western Australian plants surround this area.
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HMS Queen Elizabeth Shells
Presented to the Park by the Admiral of the British
Fleet in 1921. The HMS Queen Elizabeth helped to cover
the operations of the Australian Imperial Forces at
Gallipoli in 1915.
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Leake Memorial Fountain
Erected as a memorial to George Leake who became Premier
of Western Australia in 1901.
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2/16th Battalion Memorial
Honours the men of this battalion who fought in Syria,
New Guinea and Borneo in WWII.
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Kokoda Memorial Plaque
Commemorates all units who served on the Kokoda Track
in WWII.
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Jewish War Memorial
Erected in 1920 to honour soldiers of the Jewish faith
who died in WWI. A plaque was added in 1953 to commemorate
those who died in WWII.
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Bali Memorial
Commemorates the loss and suffering of the Bali tragedy
which occurred on 12 October 2002.
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